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7_Sorrows
Guest
my friend was married in her 70’s.
she is now a widow.
she is now a widow.
While that may have been the custom in some places, that was never the universal rule. If you google, there are lots of pictures of Jackie Kennedy wearing white veils as well as black. Some people will say that only married women wore black; others will say that only widows wore black; still others will say that women wore white or light veils in the spring and summer, and black or dark veils in the fall and winter. (That last one would make sense with the rules my mom and grandma passed on to me about wearing white dress shoes from Easter until Labor Day, and black dress shoes from Labor Day up until Easter. I don’t think anyone follows that guideline much anymore, but that apparently was what women did in the '60s, at least according to my mom and grandma.A white veil is for single young ladies, I.e. never married; black is for widows.
I definitely agree with you there. I also wouldn’t wear a black one to a wedding because to people unfamiliar with the custom, it looks like mourning.One fashion etiquette rule that really needs to be followed, even these days, would be to not wear a white veil or even ivory, to someone else’s wedding. I believe if you are a very young girl, you could pass with it, but an adult woman should not wear a white veil to a wedding, regardless if she’s single or not.
Or a wide headband like this:If the priest isn’t comfortable with her wearing a veil, then a chapel cap is fine too.
How would a head-covering do that?and help stay focused on the meaning of Mass.
It’s not controversial, and frankly I see women in head coverings at every OF Mass I go to and nobody cares. I don’t think anybody even notices.I don’t understand why it is such a controversial subject and I don’t understand
why some are against it or why it bothers them so much.